Pressure ulcers don’t appear out of thin air. They typically develop when sustained pressure, friction, or shearing goes unaddressed—often in combination with risk factors like limited movement, moisture exposure, poor nutrition, or reduced sensation.
When families hear “the resident’s condition caused it,” the facility may be trying to shift the blame away from day-to-day care. In pressure ulcer cases, the key question is whether the nursing home responded with a reasonable prevention plan and timely treatment once risk was identified.
In Merriam and the surrounding Kansas communities, families often start by comparing what they were told at admission or during check-ins with what the medical chart shows later: skin checks, repositioning support, wound assessments, and whether care plans were followed consistently.


